Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

In the right state of mind

Earnhardt Jr. faces the future

- BRANT JAMES

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – Dale Earnhardt Jr. said he is mentally prepared to walk away from racing when the time comes, either from a possible recurrence of the concussion­s that cost him the second half of the 2016 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series or because of inevitable retirement. But he’s also mentally prepared for his return, he asserted.

And hours after undertakin­g his first practice session in preparatio­n for the Feb. 26 Daytona 500, Earnhardt told a group of reporters when the decision comes in either instance, he will make it for himself.

“I won’t have any regrets,” said Earnhardt, 42. “For the longest time, I let racing be what I was, not what I did.”

Earnhardt ceded the Hendrick Motorsport­s No. 88 Chevrolet to Alex Bowman and Jeff Gordon for the second half of last season after the disorienta­tion he felt weeks after a July race at Kentucky stemmed not from allergies as he expected but a concussion suffered three races earlier at Michigan. Earnhardt had sustained previous concussion­s earlier in his career.

As NASCAR’s most popular driver for 14 consecutiv­e seasons, the son and namesake of one of the sport’s legends and a marketing dynamo, Earnhardt is yoked with vast responsibi­lity beyond his contributi­ons as a driver.

Earnhardt said his neurologis­t, Micky Collins, medical director of University of Pittsburgh Medical Center Sports Medicine, impressed upon him that an attempted return was wise only with the requisite personal passion.

“There’s so many moving parts to what we having going on,” Earnhardt admitted. “There’s a lot of elements and it’s not an easy decision to say when is the time to hang it up and is it worth it and all that good stuff. There was a lot of time in there during the recovery where there were days where I was 90 percent sure I wasn’t going to drive again. There was days when it was 50%.”

“I’m not going to race for any other reason but I want to be out there. I don’t think that’s very smart to do it for any other reasons. There’s motivation­s to racing: the fans and camaraderi­e and all the great things you get to experience, but if I’m gonna come back I have to be racing because I want to be out there.

“I couldn’t do that and put myself through the chance I could be back in rehab for months and months going through that crap again if I really didn’t want to be out there.”

Rained out

The Advance Auto Parts Clash, the exhibition opener for a limited field, was reschedule­d for 10:30 a.m. Sunday with coverage on FS1.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Dale Earnhardt Jr. examines his car in the garage at Daytona Internatio­nal Speedway.
GETTY IMAGES Dale Earnhardt Jr. examines his car in the garage at Daytona Internatio­nal Speedway.

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